Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Information Archiving

Transcription

1 G Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Information Archiving Published: 6 December 2011 Analyst(s): Sheila Childs, Kenneth Chin, Debra Logan On-premises and cloud enterprise information archiving are contributing to organizational needs for meeting e-discovery and compliance requirements, and reducing primary storage costs. Gartner evaluates vendors offering products that provide archiving for , file and other content types. What You Need to Know During the last decade, was the predominate application targeted by enterprises for archiving. The reasons for this are clear and consistent: is an application that can consume large amounts of storage, and the associated data is largely unmanaged. In addition, the increase in legal discovery associated with has driven demand for archiving applications that offer basic e-discovery functionality. Beyond the requirement for simple on-premises archiving that meets these requirements for , other trends have emerged: Gartner has seen an increase in end-user demand in addressing these same challenges for additional content types, including user data stored on file shares, Microsoft SharePoint and other on-premises unstructured content. There has been increasing interest in archiving and managing content that originates in the cloud, including hosted data, instant messages, text messages and social media content. Archiving deployment models have shifted: Organizations are more frequently considering archive as a service (or cloud archiving) as a solution for their aging data management challenges. File archiving for very large volumes of data is emerging as a requirement in organizations that had previously addressed their data growth issues by simply adding more storage. In the vast majority of organizations, much of the content that needs to be managed is infrequently accessed after a period of time. Enterprises are looking for cost-effective products that can deliver policy-based retention management, as well as legal hold, as a way to manage this aging data. While records management can help address the retention of static content, the volume of content that and other office productivity tools generate is often more than records management systems were designed for, and many organizations are not mature in their records management programs.

2 Vendors have responded to these customer requirements for broader management of aging data. Many vendors that have historically offered support for archiving have added support for file and SharePoint archiving. Leading vendors are taking this expanded information archiving approach a step further they are adding support for text messages, social media content and, in some cases, even structured application data. This Magic Quadrant profiles vendors that offer, at a minimum, integrated and file archiving. Archiving of other content types is discussed, but is not required for participation in this research. Year over year, vendors are offering products that support multiple content types with an increased focus on a transparent user experience, enhanced e-discovery (including more advanced search capabilities), scalability improvements and flexible policies for mailbox management and compliance. The archiving component of enterprise information archiving (EIA) products has stabilized, and references report few issues; however, file and SharePoint archiving are not as mature. Enterprises continue to face challenges on policy definition, ingestion of personal archive files, scalability and complex deployments. Cloud archiving solutions address a number of these challenges. Vendors are highly competitive across cloud and on-premises solutions, enabling enterprises to negotiate pricing to their advantage. Finally, as EIA products emerge that are built on new architectures, offer support for more content types, add better e-discovery features or offer their services in the cloud, enterprises are more frequently evaluating a move from an existing product to one of these updated or "next generation" products. Even though it can be very costly and time-consuming to migrate massive amounts of archived data to a new system, enterprises have demonstrated that they are serious about information management, and will swap out older products for one that better meets their requirements. Magic Quadrant It is never a good idea to compare the placement of vendors in the Magic Quadrant with their position in the previous year, due to market dynamics that occur over the course of a 12-month period. In this case, evolving use cases, new cloud solutions and the closely related e-discovery software market, along with evolving partnerships and acquisitions, make the EIA a fast-changing market. Placement on the Magic Quadrant (see Figure 1) is based on Gartner's view of a vendor's performance against the criteria listed below. Page 2 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

3 Figure 1. Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Information Archiving Source: Gartner (December 2011) Gartner's view regarding vendor placement is heavily influenced by our more than 1,000 conversations over the past 12 months with Gartner clients on the topic of EIA. In addition, the Magic Quadrant methodology includes the solicitation of references from each vendor; for this Magic Quadrant, Gartner conducted nearly 100 conversations with vendor references. We learn how they are using the product, what they like and don't like about it, and why they decided to go with the vendor they selected. We also learn about their experience with sales and support, and their opinions on vendor responsiveness to aspects like requests for enhancements. Prior to publication, each vendor has the opportunity to review its placement on the Magic Quadrant and the strengths and challenges listed, and to respond to any factual errors. It is important to remember that the Magic Quadrant does not just rate a product's quality, capabilities and features. The product is an important part of the rating, but the vendor's ability to acquire customers and expand its presence in the market is equally important, as is its ability to grow product and service revenue. A vendor that offers a strong, technically elegant product, but is unable or unwilling to invest in marketing and sales to generate revenue and growth, will find itself unable to invest in future development. This is particularly true in a market like EIA, where establishing leadership, vision and credibility will propel some vendors to the front of the pack. Gartner, Inc. G Page 3 of 30

4 Market Overview Gartner tracks the market for distributed system archiving as a subsegment of the storage management software market called hierarchical storage management (HSM) and archiving. This market will continue to see strong growth, experiencing a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 17.5% through This is down somewhat due to the sluggish macroeconomic climate (last year, we reported a projected 22.3% five-year CAGR), and to a drop in performance from some leading vendors. Negative growth forces are counterbalanced by an organization's need to respond to ongoing legislative changes, and to a broader focus on information governance, including the management of social content as a corporate resource. The Trend Toward Management of Multiple Content Types The challenges organizations are facing with respect to the management of data are increasingly being seen with file system data. Archiving products that can address both and files generally provide efficiencies across these content types, versus taking a siloed approach to management. For example, storage efficiencies can be gained via the ability to identify an attachment in an is another identical instance of a file on a file share, and then store it only once in the archive. E-discovery efficiency can be gained as well via the ability to search across, view and export multiple content types from one interface. Enterprises generally start with ( represented over 70% of archive revenue in 2010), then add support for files at a later date. Most vendors have added support for Microsoft SharePoint content, but the end-user requirement to archive this content has not fully materialized. Vendors are beginning to report SharePoint archiving sales, however, and some vendors such as EMC, Metalogix and OpenText are investing heavily in promoting their SharePoint archiving solutions. In January 2010, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) released Regulatory Notice 10-06, which gives guidance on how firms should capture and supervise broker-dealer communications conducted via social networks. This has prompted many vendors to add support for this type of content, either natively or via integration with products from vendors like Actiance or Socialware. Other content types that enterprises are looking to manage, in varying degrees, include instant messages, images and documents generated by applications or scanned, and structured (database) data. Structured Data as a Component of EIA The drivers for structured data archiving (database archiving) are slightly different than those for and file archiving. Database archiving is more prevalent in larger organizations that have extremely large amounts of application data, and that are experiencing the high costs and performance issues associated with managing large databases. By archiving older application data, storage costs can be reduced, and application performance can be improved. Most database archiving products offer modules that allow a subset of data to be extracted from an application for test or development use (again, improving efficiency). Database archiving is also being used for application retirement. Page 4 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

5 Where database archiving becomes a component of EIA is when some subset of application data needs to be retained for e-discovery or compliance purposes. In this case, database archiving tools can identify business objects that can then be stored with the appropriate retention and deletion policies, and data can be produced as part of an e-discovery activity. Database archiving vendors that offer this capability include HP, IBM, Informatica and Solix. IBM's Optim database archiving products are loosely integrated with its EIA solution. Informatica has established partnerships with Symantec and CommVault to offer joint customers the ability to store archived business objects in these EIA vendors' repositories. Structured data archiving is not included in this year's EIA Magic Quadrant there is no evaluation of a vendor's products or capabilities in this area. However, a strategy to support structured data archiving as part of a vendor's vision is considered favorably. Migrations Enterprises are leveraging the introduction of an EIA product to facilitate application migrations or, in some cases, vice versa. Some vendors offer the capability to manage data from multiple systems in the same repository, which can facilitate migration as older, archived messages can be accessible via the new system. Most EIA solutions support Microsoft Exchange and IBM Lotus Notes; fewer offer support for Novell GroupWise. Enterprises are also seeing migrations from one version of Exchange (Exchange 2003 or Exchange 2007, for example) to another (Exchange 2010) as opportunities to implement archiving policies; being able to apply deletion policies to data prior to or during an upgrade reduces the amount of data that must be migrated. A vendor's ability to support multiple messaging applications, as well as PST ingestion, is considered in this Magic Quadrant. The Importance of E-Discovery Often, the customer's most important requirement is to facilitate and simplify e-discovery. All vendors describe their e-discovery functionality as it aligns with the Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM), and most organizations that are looking closely at an e-discovery solution have become familiar with it as well. EIA vendors promote their archiving tools as being aligned with the information management stage of this model, and in addition offer varying degrees of functionality for identification, preservation, collection, review and analysis. At a minimum, e-discovery features should include the ability to set legal holds, provide multiuser search capability with an interface that is targeted toward legal reviewers, allow user tagging and export in one of several formats, including a native format for more extensive legal review. This functionality should be available for all supported content types. Note that some vendors have extended indexing and hold functionality for data beyond what is stored in the archive (in-place legal holds), but offer this functionality as a feature of their archiving product. Although e-discovery and compliance are the most important drivers for archiving, file archiving is still predominately driven by storage cost reduction and infrastructure optimization. One of the challenges associated with proactive e-discovery readiness for files is the determination of what policies to use for retention and disposition. File data can be very disparate, and developing detailed policies for retention is extremely difficult. It is much simpler to archive all files older than X Gartner, Inc. G Page 5 of 30

6 days. Even with such a general retention scheme, the data reduction across files and that are achieved when policies such as these are implemented are proving attractive to organizations. Archiving in the Cloud The interest in archiving data using cloud or software as a service (SaaS) solutions has intensified. Organizations view aging data that they must retain for compliance or historical reasons as an appropriate content type to move to the cloud this data is infrequently accessed, does not require rapid response time and is generally not core to the organization's day-to-day operations. While cloud archiving can be very cost-effective, the prevailing sentiment to simply give the problem of managing this data to someone else seems to be one of the most common reasons organizations cite for selecting cloud or SaaS archiving. It is worth noting at this point that while an organization can outsource physical data storage, it cannot abdicate its responsibility to discover and produce content for legal and regulatory purposes. This deployment model is rapidly evolving, and organizations now have solid options for on-premises and SaaS or hybrid solutions. Hybrid solutions consist of some component (usually an appliance) that resides on-premises that can provide additional processing prior to sending data to the cloud, such as bandwidth throttling, encryption or data reduction. In addition, hybrid solutions can provide tight integration with Active Directory or the system. Cloud archiving is attractive to organizations of all sizes; however, most implementations are with small to midsize organizations. There are thousands of these deployments, with the more wellknown cloud archiving vendors claiming 10,000 to 20,000 customers each. Cloud archiving is also benefiting from the interest organizations are showing in Microsoft Office 365 and other hosted messaging and collaboration deployments. In fact, some on-premises archiving vendors have added functionality to their products to archive data from Office 365 back to an on-premises archive, where it can be managed holistically with other data. Inhibitors to cloud archiving do persist, however. Concerns include privacy (particularly in Europe), physical location of the archive (organizations should ask where the cloud data centers are located) and organizational loss of control of the data. New EIA deployments in the cloud are increasing, despite concerns about privacy. Cloud vendors that meet the criteria are included in the EIA Magic Quadrant this year for the first time. All cloud vendors included here offer some file archiving, but this support is new in all cases. Gartner chose to include these cloud vendors although their file archiving capabilities are new and, in some cases, references were light, due to the importance of cloud within the broader EIA market. Cloud and on-premises solutions also are evolving differently, and archiving on-premises file content using a cloud-based EIA service may not materialize as a common use case. Most cloud archiving vendors offer support for multiple content types; however, these comprise things like instant messages, social media and text messages. Gartner predicts that EIA cloud vendors will offer support for files going forward, but the method by which will be developed, purchased and deployed remains to be seen. In this area, EIA cloud vendors may see competition from cloud storage or cloud storage gateway vendors that are promoting their offerings as inexpensive alternatives to on-premises file storage. Vendors included in this research that currently offer support for file archiving as part of their services include LiveOffice, Proofpoint and Sonian. In addition, a number of on-premises vendors such as Autonomy, MessageSolution and Symantec Page 6 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

7 offer both an on-premises product and a cloud service. Gartner profiled cloud archiving vendors in "Outsourcing Archiving: 2Q11 Vendor Update." Microsoft Enters the Archiving Market In November 2009, Microsoft released Microsoft Exchange 2010 with native support for archiving. This was a watershed event for the archiving industry in that it legitimized the use of archiving for Exchange data and made archiving accessible to all Exchange users who purchase the appropriate Exchange license. Additionally, it put Microsoft in the position of competing with vendors that it previously considered close partners in the archiving business. Exchange 2010 archiving gives administrators the ability to provision a secondary mailbox for each user that appears alongside his or her primary mailbox. This mailbox is set up as a repository for older mail and attachments, managed by data retention and deletion policies. The look and feel are similar to that of PST files, and this feature should be considered a replacement for PSTs. Basic legal hold is supported, as well as more advanced legal review features like role-based multimailbox search, search results preview, optional deduplication of search results and annotation of reviewed items. Exchange 2010 archiving is a good choice for organizations that have never implemented archiving, are struggling with rapid, unmanageable growth of historical or are looking to replace PST files with a more efficient and secure archiving capability, while preserving the user's PST experience. Organizations that need more mature, feature-rich archiving and e-discovery solutions should continue to consider EIA products. As there is no support for files or other content types beyond , Microsoft's archiving capabilities are not rated in this Magic Quadrant. Mergers and Acquisitions Since the last active archiving Magic Quadrant, there have been a number of mergers and acquisitions in the EIA space: In May 2011, Autonomy bought Iron Mountain's digital business, including its archiving, e- discovery, and online backup and recovery solutions. In May 2011, Symantec acquired privately held Clearwell Systems, an e-discovery vendor. In October 2011, HP acquired control of Autonomy. Market Definition/Description EIA is the next step in the evolution of archiving that incorporates new products and solutions for archiving user files ( and files on file shares) and, optionally, other content types such as instant messages, SharePoint, structured data and social media content. These products provide features such as data deduplication across content types, retention management, content indexing and at least basic tools for e-discovery, such as search and legal hold. Due to the complexity associated with managing multiple data types within an archive, EIA may more broadly encompass Gartner, Inc. G Page 7 of 30

8 capabilities like federated archive repository management, while delivering common policy management for migration, retention and discovery. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria To be included in the 2011 EIA Magic Quadrant, a vendor must: Be the developer of the product and not just a reseller or value-added reseller (VAR). Support a growing base of customers, including at least five enterprise customers (5,000 users or more) that are using the software in a production environment for archiving (mailbox management and compliance archiving), with at least three of those using the product for file archiving. Provide five references to Gartner to support compliance with the criteria: At least three references using on-premises products for archiving should be using it for file archiving as well. Pure-play cloud vendors (those without an on-premises offering) should provide three file archiving references for customers of any size, as file archiving in the cloud is new functionality, and vendor services in this area are not mature. Have a presence in at least two geographies worldwide, and be vertical-industry-independent. Provide their solution as an on-premises software product, a SaaS offering or some combination thereof. Added New vendors include LiveOffice, Proofpoint, Sonian and Waterford Technologies. Dropped Vendors dropped from the Magic Quadrant include HP, CGS and Easy Software. Evaluation Criteria Ability to Execute Ability to Execute criteria are: Product/Service: An evaluation of the features and functions of the vendor's EIA solution means that: The product must support integrated and file archiving. Integration must support the following: Page 8 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

9 Data reduction across multiple content types (e.g., deduplication, single-instance storage) Common management across content types for supported features (e.g., policy management, user definition, retention management) Full-text indexing and search for all content types The road map should support plans for continued integration of multiple content types. Higher ratings are assigned for support for Microsoft SharePoint, instant messages, text messages, video/audio, social media content and structured data (applications and databases). That is, support for these content types is optional, but is considered favorably. Higher ratings are assigned to solutions with strong archive architectures, policy-based archiving and mailbox management features ( ), e-discovery and retention management capabilities. Overall Viability (Business Unit, Financial, Strategy, Organization): Viability includes an assessment of the vendor's overall financial health, the financial and practical success of the EIA business unit and the likelihood of the individual business unit to continue to invest in an EIA solution. Sales Execution/Pricing: This covers the vendor's capabilities in all presales activities and the structures that support them. This includes pricing and negotiation, presales support and the overall effectiveness of the sales channel. Market Responsiveness and Track Record: This addresses the ability to respond, change direction and be flexible as market dynamics vary. This criterion also considers the vendor's history of responsiveness. Marketing Execution: This criterion assesses the effectiveness of the vendor's marketing programs, and its ability to create awareness and mind share in the market. It assesses whether the messaging is clear, whether the vendor has provided references that used the unique features of the product in its target environment and whether the promotion of the product on the company website was effective. Customer Experience: This covers the quality of the customer experience, based on reference calls and Gartner client teleconferences (inquiries). Operations: This is the ability of the organization to meet its goals and commitments in an efficient manner. Past performance is weighted heavily (see Table 1). Gartner, Inc. G Page 9 of 30

10 Table 1. Ability to Execute Evaluation Criteria Evaluation Criteria Product/Service Overall Viability (Business Unit, Financial, Strategy, Organization) Sales Execution/Pricing Market Responsiveness and Track Record Marketing Execution Customer Experience Operations Weighting high standard standard standard high high low Source: Gartner (December 2011) Completeness Of Vision A vendor's Completeness of Vision is evaluated based on its ability to convincingly articulate its future product direction and demonstrate innovation in meeting customer needs, enabling the vendor to more effectively compete in the market. The credibility of a vendor's vision is weighed against its past ability to execute against previously stated plans. Market understanding should be the guiding factor in new product development to ensure that the engineered product meets customer needs. Managing the complexity of storage environments requires innovative approaches that will distinguish leaders and satisfy customers. Completeness of Vision criteria are: Market Understanding: This is the ability of vendors to understand buyers' needs, and to translate these needs into the appropriate features in their EIA products. It includes the ability to anticipate market trends (for example, the requirement to archive other content and to provide strong e-discovery support), and to quickly adapt via new features or partnerships and/or acquisitions. Marketing Strategy: This assesses whether there is a clear set of messages that positions the product and differentiates it from competitors, and is consistently communicated throughout the organization and externalized through the website, advertising, customer programs and positioning statements. Sales Strategy: This covers the vendor's strategy for selling to its target audience, including an analysis of the appropriate mix of direct and indirect sales channels. Offering (Product) Strategy: This is an evaluation of the vendor's strategic product direction, including an analysis of its road map. Page 10 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

11 Business Model: This addresses the soundness and logic of a vendor's underlying business proposition. Vertical/Industry Strategy: This covers the vendor's strategy for meeting the specific needs of individual vertical markets and market segments (for example, financial industry-regulated employee supervision, or state and local government information retention and disclosure requirements). Innovation: This criterion includes product leadership and the ability to deliver archiving features and functions that distinguish the vendor from its competitors. Geographic Strategy: The vendor's strategy for penetrating geographies outside its home or native market (see Table 2). Table 2. Completeness of Vision Evaluation Criteria Evaluation Criteria Market Understanding Marketing Strategy Sales Strategy Offering (Product) Strategy Business Model Vertical/Industry Strategy Innovation Geographic Strategy Weighting standard high high high low standard standard standard Source: Gartner (December 2011) Leaders Leaders have the highest combined measures of an ability to execute and a completeness of vision. They may have the most comprehensive and scalable products. They have a proven track record of financial performance and established market presence. In terms of vision, they are perceived as thought leaders, with well-articulated plans for ease of use, how to address scalability and product breadth. For vendors to have long-term success, they must plan to address the expanded market requirements for EIA, including support for multiple content types, support for the cloud, solid relevant e-discovery functionality and a seamless user experience. Leaders must not only deliver to current market requirements, which continue to change, but they also need to anticipate and begin to deliver on future requirements. A cornerstone for Leaders is the Gartner, Inc. G Page 11 of 30

12 ability to articulate how these requirements will be addressed as part of their vision for expanded archive management. As a group, Leaders can be expected to be considered as part of most new purchase proposals, and to have high success rates in winning new business. There are three leaders in this Magic Quadrant Autonomy, IBM and Symantec. Challengers Challengers can execute today, but have a limited or an evolving vision. They have capable products and can perform well for many enterprises. These vendors have the financial and market resources and capabilities to become Leaders, but the important question is whether they have the understanding of market trends and the market requirements needed to succeed in the future. In the case of EIA, it may mean that they have elected to focus more heavily on one content type or one EIA use case. They may not devote sufficient development, marketing or sales resources to deliver products with broad market appeal and leadership features. The challengers in this Magic Quadrant include CommVault, EMC, OpenText and Proofpoint. Visionaries Visionaries are forward-thinking, but their execution has not propelled them into a leadership position. These vendors are differentiated by product innovation, but they have not achieved completeness of solution or the sales and marketing success required to give them the high visibility of leaders. Visionaries in this year's Magic Quadrant are LiveOffice and ZL Technologies. Niche Players Niche Players are narrowly focused on an application, a market or a product mix, or they offer broad capabilities without the relative success of their competitors in other quadrants. Niche Players may focus on a segment of the market and do it well, or they may simply have modest horizons and lower overall capabilities, compared with competitors. Others are simply too new to the market or have fallen behind, and although they're worth watching they have not yet developed complete functionality or the ability to execute. Niche Players in this Magic Quadrant include Atempo, AXS- One, C2C, MessageSolution, Metalogix, Sonian and Waterford Technologies. Vendor Strengths and Cautions Atempo Atempo is a privately held company based in Palo Alto, California. Atempo was founded in 1992 as a provider of backup and recovery software, and began offering Atempo Digital Archive for Messaging (ADAM) and Atempo Digital Archive (ADA) in early ADA is offered specifically for file archiving. The company works closely with partners in the media and entertainment industry such as Apple and Avid, as well as a number of other digital asset and media asset management vendors to deliver solutions targeted at the management of large files. The company is one of the few vendors to offer native support for Novell GroupWise as part of its archiving feature set. Due in large part to Atempo's French origins, a large percentage of its business is within Europe, and it currently supports over 140 VARs worldwide. The products are particularly attractive to Page 12 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

13 Atempo Time Navigator backup customers, as they are integrated at the storage layer, and can share certain data management functions such as deduplication across both backup and archive. Despite this apparent synergy, however, Atempo has seen excellent growth related specifically to ADA, and the majority of new ADA deals are not sales to existing Atempo Time Navigator customers. Atempo's sales strategy is to focus on ADA, and only offer ADAM opportunistically or as part of a holistic EIA deal. Strengths Atempo file archiving works well within specific vertical industries that manage large volumes of unstructured data, including video (media and entertainment, high-performance computing and life sciences), and should be considered by organizations with creative departments managing unstructured content. The products are competitively priced; customers report that Atempo is very willing to negotiate, and is a pleasure to do business with. Atempo is responsive and willing to go the extra mile to work with customers and partners to address issues. There is excellent support for the Mac environment, in addition to support for Windows, Linux and Unix. Cautions ADAM offers only minimal e-discovery functionality, and is more appropriate for organizations looking for mailbox management as their primary requirement. There is no support for SharePoint, IM, SMS or other content types as part of an EIA solution set. Some references report that while Atempo is responsive, larger development efforts (new features and large-scale bug fixes) take longer than expected. Autonomy, an HP Company At the time of this analysis, Autonomy was a publicly traded company with dual headquarters in the U.S. and the U.K. In October 2011, HP acquired control of Autonomy for approximately $10 billion in cash (Autonomy's revenue was $870 million in fiscal-year 2010). Autonomy will be operated as a separate business unit headed by Mike Lynch, the company's founder and CEO. It currently offers a full suite of products for EIA, e-discovery and information governance. It has grown its archiving businesses both organically and via acquisition, including the purchases of Zantaz in 2007, CA Technologies' information governance business in 2010 and Iron Mountain's digital business in Autonomy offers its products and services in a variety of deployment models, including appliance, on-premises and cloud. Beyond archiving, Autonomy's product suite gives it multiple points of entry to potential archiving clients. Autonomy's products are well-suited to clients in highly regulated industries, with compliance, archiving and supervision features that meet the needs of these users. The product does particularly well for visionary clients that ultimately wish to tackle longstanding enterprisewide information management and governance issues. Gartner, Inc. G Page 13 of 30

14 Strengths Autonomy's Intelligent Data Operating Layer (IDOL) platform technology provides functionality that is integrated into all of its archiving products, and offers sophisticated search and review capabilities. It also provides an integration point for other Autonomy information management products. Autonomy addresses the needs of large, highly regulated and sophisticated clients very well. It is well-regarded by internal legal departments that appreciate its power and speed in searching for data in large archives. Autonomy continues to expand its cloud installed base and can provide large organizations that are archiving data to the cloud as references. Cautions Autonomy offers one of the most expensive products on the market, although it is more competitively priced for midsize businesses. As Autonomy is integrated into HP (at the time of this writing), uncertainty as to the ultimate direction of the company and success of the business will remain. Some Autonomy customers express dissatisfaction with sales and support; Autonomy is tackling this with its Customer Liaison program. AXS-One, a Daegis Company AXS-One is a division of the e-discovery services company Daegis, founded in 1999 and based in Roseville, California. In 2010, Daegis merged with Unify, which had acquired AXS-One in In order to reestablish what has become for customers a somewhat confusing identity, the company is reinvesting in the AXS-One brand by going to market as AXS-One, a Daegis Company. As a result of the integration of these three companies, the portfolio of offerings not only includes archiving, but also e-discovery technology and services. AXS-One's Central Archive is a scalable archiving platform best known for its ability to handle large volumes of Lotus Domino mail, although it supports Exchange and other mail systems. AXS-One can archive content from anything that can be exposed in a standard file system, along with SharePoint and social media. Legacy data in the form of print files, reports and transactional files can be archived, as can transactional and database information in the form of reports via a module called ucool Report Archive. Legal case management and supervision modules are available, as is support for Amazon cloud storage. AXS- One has lost market share in the past few years, resulting in a restructuring of the business in The company is currently working on better global account management, and investing in additional marketing to regain lost ground. Strengths There is good support for Lotus Domino, and excellent e-discovery capabilities for early case assessment and other discovery-related tasks. Page 14 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

15 A range of content types, including file systems, SharePoint, social media, database data and SAP content, can be archived within globally distributed common repositories supporting federated management and search. Having a long history in the EIA market gives the company an excellent understanding of what's required for EIA products. Cautions Customers report difficulty with configuration, patching, upgrading and a dependence on Daegis professional services not only to upgrade, but also to make system changes of any significance due to the technical complexity of the system. The company has made addressing these issues a development priority in Some customers report that search across large archives fails in unexpected ways that often require investigation and rework to run them again. AXS-One has lost market traction over the past few years as a result of merger/acquisition activity, and corporate refocusing on EIA products is under way. C2C C2C was founded in 1993 and is a privately held company with headquarters in the U.K. C2C offers two versions of its flagship on-premises archiving product: ArchiveOne Enterprise and ArchiveOne Express. ArchiveOne supports Exchange, Lotus Domino, instant messages, Windows file systems and SharePoint. Support for cloud storage and disaster recovery is provided via integration with APIs from Amazon. C2C's ArchiveOne Express is software packaged for small implementations (fewer than 200 users). ArchiveOne Enterprise supports a broader set of functionality, including archiving, e-discovery and retention management for data within or outside the archive, and is appropriate for much larger implementations. The vendor recently released new e-discovery functionality, spanning the left side of the EDRM model, from information management through processing and export of data for review. C2C now also supports in-place litigation hold so that data can be preserved, with an optional migration to the archive. A new focus on large enterprise deployments and an increase in North American business show that C2C is executing well on its strategy, but it remains one of the smaller players in the market. Strengths The archiving products offer simple implementation, with a minimal infrastructure required to deploy. Searches can go across live and archived data, as well as across public folders, PSTs and file system data, returning one result set, and policies for copy or move to an archive can be executed from a policy search. Customers cite completeness of features at a low cost as a factor in purchasing the product. Gartner, Inc. G Page 15 of 30

16 Cautions The company's small size makes growth and visibility difficult. Although C2C now has extensive e-discovery functionality inside and outside the archive, this occurred too late for Gartner to do reference checks with in-production customers. The company is focusing its sales and marketing efforts in North America, the U.K. and France. As such, there is limited coverage in other geographies. CommVault Based in Oceanport, New Jersey, and publicly traded, CommVault was incorporated in 1996 as an offshoot of Bell Labs AT&T Network Systems. CommVault is best known for its backup and recovery products, and its customers have historically seen the company's archiving offerings as an extension of backup, focused on data management and storage optimization. This view is slowly changing, as customers begin to understand the breadth of functionality available as part of Simpana archiving, including competitive support for e-discovery and compliance. CommVault's offerings for EIA are part of its Simpana portfolio, which it broadly markets as information management software. Simpana provides modules for , file, SharePoint and SAP archiving, as well as support for e-discovery and compliance based on its Simpana Search module. In 2010, file archiving revenue grew faster than archiving, and over 75% of CommVault archiving customers are using the product for both and file archiving. All products are available from CommVault directly; however, the majority of CommVault archiving revenue is via its reseller channel and a broad set of partners, including Dell, Microsoft, Hitachi Data Systems and NetApp. To date, Simpana archiving has been deployed mostly in midsize environments, although it does have a number of large customers. The products are well-suited for midsize to large enterprises that have a focus on e-discovery and compliance, but due to CommVault's continued focus on the backup market (and its ongoing success here), it continues to struggle with the right messaging, and with obtaining an entry point for information governance, compliance and e-discovery buyers. Strengths Simpana is an integrated platform supporting backup, archiving and replication, as well as common data management functions such as deduplication and indexing. This enables policy alignment across these areas, as well as efficient use of server and storage resources. Strong file archiving Simpana supports a broad set of file systems and features, and over 250 storage resource management (SRM) reports are included with the file archiving module. CommVault's vision for archiving is comprehensive, and the road map for new functionality is extensive. It includes support for cloud archiving (beyond the current support for cloud as a storage target), healthcare, media- and entertainment-specific offerings and integration of endpoint device protection into the archive story. Page 16 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

17 Cautions Due to the tight integration between backup and archiving and the efficiencies that can be gained, it may make the most sense for Simpana archiving to be deployed along with Simpana backup. This means that organizations interested in Simpana archiving may need to consider a change to their backup strategy to leverage the true power of the Simpana solution. CommVault has greatly simplified its pricing in the last 12 months. However, due to the integrated and modular nature of the Simpana platform, pricing remains more complex than that of other vendors. CommVault's strong go-to-market focus on backup and recovery leads to lack of visibility with legal buyers who are looking for e-discovery solutions. EMC EMC offers its SourceOne portfolio of products for archiving, file visibility and e-discovery. The products support Exchange, Lotus Domino other mail systems via SMTP and instant messages, as well as Windows file systems and SharePoint. The products are complemented by e-discovery and supervision products that work directly with information in the archive: SourceOne Discovery Manager and SourceOne Supervisor. Two years ago, SourceOne replaced an older product, Xtender, and customers were offered an upgrade or a coexistence strategy, and many have done the migration. Because of its heritage with Xtender, EMC had an existing body of users from which it gathered requirements to build SourceOne. As such, the product has a full complement of and content archiving features, including standard mailbox management, compliance supervision, policy management, PST ingestion, data reduction and offline access. Because EMC customers have large archives, SourceOne was built to be highly scalable, and to run in virtualized environments to optimize processing. EMC has many partners and supports them with strong training and accreditation programs. SourceOne is sold by a small overlay sales team within EMC; this sales team benefits from its relationship with the larger EMC storage sales force, and a significant percentage of deals comes through this channel. Strengths EMC has long experience with large archives and a complementary suite of hardware and software products that supports all aspects of file management, including single-instance and compliant storage, back up and virtualization, allowing for the possibility of a single-vendor solution. The company offers simple per-user pricing for mailbox management, file and SharePoint archiving. EMC has a good partner ecosystem to help solve multiple storage and data management problems, with a large ecosystem of consultants and internal professional services to supplement core product offerings. Gartner, Inc. G Page 17 of 30

18 Cautions File archiving does not have all the functionality that clients would like to see, as these components are newer to the market. SourceOne Discovery Manager provides e-discovery functionality for content that resides in the archive only; broader support for discovery of content that resides outside the archive requires that customers consider supplemental solutions either from EMC (Kazeon) or from other vendors. EMC's strategy for offering EIA in the cloud is not as comprehensive as its competitors. IBM Headquartered in Armonk, New York, IBM offers a number of products as part of its IBM Smart Archive Strategy. The strategy has evolved since its 2009 introduction to provide an Information Lifecycle Governance (ILG) solution suite consisting of elements for archiving, e-discovery, records management and governance. The IBM ILG solution suite is targeted at CIOs and general counsel decision makers to support the information management needs of the enterprise. Last year's acquisition of PSS Systems provides information governance and policy management capabilities across the IBM ILG solution suite. The Smart Archive for the IT component of the suite addresses the archiving needs for unstructured content and structured data with IBM Content Collector (ICC) and Optim, respectively. ICC supports Exchange, Lotus Domino and other mail systems via SMTP, as well as instant messages and social networking content. File archiving is supported for Windows, Unix, System z/linux, Data ONTAP (IBM N series or NetApp) and Novell NetWare. SharePoint and SAP data and document archiving are also supported. Complementary products are available for records management, e-discovery and classification. ICC can be deployed with non-ibm enterprise content management (ECM) platforms, but typically is found where customers have IBM ECM solutions such as IBM FileNet or IBM Content Manager, and can leverage them for the archive repository and utilize their integration with Tivoli Storage Manager (TSM). Customer feedback has been positive with respect to functionality and support. IBM SmartCloud Archive was launched in July 2011, with full records management and e-discovery capabilities to address the growing demand for archiving cloud services. Strengths The IBM ILG solution suite provides a comprehensive and scalable solution to support archiving, extended records management, e-discovery and information governance. IBM supports archiving for a broad range of content types, including structured data with Optim Data Growth solutions. IBM has an extensive worldwide market footprint for sales and support with its direct sales force and channel partners. Page 18 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

19 Cautions ICC is best suited for organizations that are using IBM's ECM products to leverage the integration and archive repository. IBM SmartCloud Archive is relatively new, and has yet to be proved, compared with other cloud archiving solutions. IBM's ILG solution is comprehensive, but market messaging is complex. Solutions may get lost in the IBM sales' large portfolio of hardware, software and services. LiveOffice LiveOffice is a privately held company located in Torrance, California, founded in It is a cloudonly solution, offering services for EIA and e-discovery. LiveOffice supports Exchange, Domino and GroupWise archiving, along with SharePoint and social media via partners. It is integrated with and can capture content from Office 365 and salesforce.com, along with content hosted by large file transfer vendors Box.net and Dropbox. As more companies move to cloud-based and other off-premises solutions, LiveOffice is well-positioned to capitalize on this rapidly growing market trend. LiveOffice has a focus on strategic partnerships, with partners like Symantec and Microsoft driving a significant amount of business. LiveOffice has acquired thousands of customers, but most of these are small. For enterprises that would like to adopt cloud archiving solutions, but are concerned about security, LiveOffice manages its facility and customer data according to stringent, documented security procedures, including physical data center certifications (SAS 70-II and International Organization for Standardization [ISO] ), technical data security and administrative security. Strengths LiveOffice's e-discovery and compliance capabilities are highly rated among its users. As a pure-play EIA and e-discovery SaaS vendor, LiveOffice is in a position to offer very aggressive, per-mailbox pricing. LiveOffice is available via numerous partners, and continues to work to establish integration points between its solution and other solutions (particularly e-discovery solutions) a customer may have in house. Cautions Clients have reported unscheduled downtime with LiveOffice as recently as March Although most clients have had good experiences with LiveOffice customer support, some have reported long response times and a general lack of attention to their issues. File archiving is currently limited to support for file content stored via cloud services like Box.net or Dropbox. Gartner, Inc. G Page 19 of 30

20 MessageSolution Based in Milpitas, California, MessageSolution is a privately held company that offers hosted and on-premises archiving via its Enterprise Archive and ediscovery Platform for , File Systems and SharePoint. The product supports Exchange, Lotus Domino, GroupWise and other mail systems, as well as Windows, Unix and Linux file systems, SharePoint and IBM Quickr. MessageSolution has a global presence, with a particular focus in the Asia/Pacific region (China accounts for 30% of the company's revenue). The product is built using a component-based design and a distributed computing architecture to facilitate scalability. Various content types are stored in the same archive repository, enabling single-instance storage across different mail applications and file systems. Basic e-discovery capabilities are available as part of the Enterprise ediscovery Suite, including search results review for legal personnel, saved search results and collection folder support and litigation hold. The company continues to focus on growing its worldwide network of resellers, and has expanded its target buyer to include managed service providers (MSPs) willing to offer MessageSolution technology as their hosted archiving solution. Strengths MessageSolution archiving is offered via a number of MSPs that report it is easy to use and administer. Deployments can be done via the Web by the MessageSolution system deployment team. MessageSolution offers server migration products that enable customers to archive before migrating from one messaging application, such as GroupWise or Domino, to another, such as Exchange. Cautions With a maturing archiving market, MessageSolution is limited by its visibility and marketing capabilities. It will need to increase its investment in marketing, while expanding its sales channels. A limited number of customers is using file archiving (no Linux or Unix customers to date). Customers cite minimal documentation and first-level support response as areas for improvement. Metalogix Privately held Metalogix was founded in 2001 and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. The company launched its first archiving products as a result of the acquisition of H&S Software in 2008, and currently provides support for Microsoft Exchange and SharePoint, as well as Windows and Unix file shares. Metalogix has made a name for itself as a vendor of SharePoint data management solutions (including migration, archiving, storage management and data protection), bolstered by its acquisition of SharePoint vendor BlueThread Technologies in Also in 2010, new executive leadership resulted in more focus on go to market, product branding and channel expansion. As a result, Metalogix's archiving and SharePoint businesses have experienced Page 20 of 30 Gartner, Inc. G

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